Unit 3: EconomicsSS9 – Ms.Gill
In this unit, we will…
• Chapter 6 – Economic Systems• The basics of economics, including: scarcity, economic systems, competition, supply and demand, and the economic systems of Canada and the United States.
• Cobra Den Project• Chapter 7 – Consumerism
• What is consumerism? How does what you consume impact the environment. What are different marketing techniques used by companies?
• Chapter 8 -‐ Social Programs and Taxation • What is the relationship between social programs and government values? What are different social programs in the Canada and how are they similar or different than those in the United States?
• Chapter 9 – Government Responses to Political and Economic Issues• How do decisions about environmental issues affect the development of resources, jobs and quality of life. You will investigate how governments and citizens respond to specific environmental issues that affect you and others.
Chapter 9: How should governments inCanada respond to politicaland economic issues?
Vocabulary
• biodiversity: the number and variety of plant and animal species on Earth, including genetic variation within individual species• climate change: a rise in the average temperature of the Earth, primarily caused by emissions from burning fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and natural gas
Focus Questions
• How do environmental issues involve political and economic decision making?• What political and economic decisions should Canadians make to respond to climate change?• What political and economic decisions should Canadians make to protect biodiversity?
• This photo shows Fish Creek Provincial Park, a natural area in Calgary.• Environmental issues can involve local matters, such as natural areas in your region. They can also involve provincial and national matters, such as clean-‐air laws, and global matters, such as climate change.• What environmental issues concern you?
How do environmental issues involvepolitical and economic decision making?
• Environmental Issues = harmful effects of human activity on the biophysical environment.• Environmental Issues arise because of human activities that change the natural world. For example, changes happen when factories release toxins and other pollutants into the air or water, or when housing developments occupy land that once supported wild plants and animals.
How are governance, economics, andenvironmental issues connected?
Homework
• Write a paragraph outlining • Your environmental concerns and daily habits • How could we be a more environmental friendly school?
• Video: • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vONBU7btYuo• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4z7gDsSKUmU
Climate Change
• Climate change refers to a rise in the average temperature of Earth due to a build-‐up of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere. An international panel of scientists — the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change — predicts that climate change will have extensive and mostly negative impacts around the globe. These impacts include rising sea levels, more severe weather, and disruption of ecosystems and freshwater supplies.
Greenhouse Gas
• GHGs primarily come from burning fossil fuels, such as natural gas, gasoline, coal and oil. Most economies in the world rely on fossil fuels to produce resources, such as metals and foods, and to manufacture and transport goods and services. Individual consumers also use fossil fuels — for example, to heat their homes and drive their cars.• GHGs in the atmosphere affect the whole world. A region or country that emits more GHGs will not experience “worse” global warming. Different regions, however, will experience different impacts. • For example, low-‐lying land — such as New Orleans, and the country of Bangladesh — face severe impacts from rising sea levels.
Different Perspectives
• Why might North Americans have different ideas about how to respond to climate change?• Regions and impacts: how regional differences in the impacts of climate change connect to political and economic decision making.• Regions and emissions: how regional differences in the sources of GHGs connect to political and economic decision making.
Climate Change
• The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicts impacts such as the following for North America from warmer temperatures:✕ Decline in abundance of fresh water (lakes and rivers)✕ Loss of wildlife species overall. Some species will adapt to warmer temperatures
✕More extreme weather events, such as storms and droughts.✕ Longer growing seasons, possibly resulting in higher crop yields and increased forest growth in some regions.
✕ Flooding along coastlines.
Why might the Inuit seek a strong voice in politicaland economic decision making connected to climate change?
Canada’s Total CO2 Emissions
• Alberta has a large GHG output because of its oil industry and its coal-‐fired plants for generating electricity.• Ontario has a large GHG output because of its manufacturing sector, including steel mills and plants for processing metal ores.• Political and economic decision making helps shape the industries and plants that Alberta and Ontario have. For example:• Laws and policies set standards for pollution control, including GHG emissions.• Demand for energy and for products influences the number of industrial plants in operation.
• Reducing GHG emissions from industry is one way to respond to climate change — a way many governments and people around the world recommend.
Compare the map on this page with the data in the table. To what extent do GDP and population correlate with GHG emissions? Support your answer with evidence.
International Agreements
• The U.S. has faced pressure from countries around the world to reduce its GHG emissions. • In 2007, the U.S. had not agreed to join international negotiations or agreements concerning climate change, such as the Kyoto Protocol. • International negotiations on climate change focus on reducing the GHG emissions of developed countries, such as the U.S. and Canada. Developing countries, such as Mexico, do not face the same GHG restrictions. This is because GHG restrictions can slow the economy of a country, which goes against the needs and interests of developing countries. It is also because developed countries have a higher GHG output than developing countries — so they contribute more to climate change.
Kyoto Protocol
• The Kyoto Protocol was the first climate-‐change plan the countries of the world negotiated. The U.S. did not agree to the plan. Canada at first agreed, but its position has changed depending on the political party in power. • Canada’s Liberal government ratified the Kyoto Protocol in 2002. It, however, did not make decisions that reduced Canada’s overall GHG emissions.
• In 2006, Canadians elected a Conservative government, which announced that Canada would not meet its targets under the Kyoto Protocol. The government said the targets would damage Canada’s economy, and noted that Canada’s GHG emissions were rising, not falling
• In December 2007, an international meeting in Bali, Indonesia, launched new international negotiations on an agreement to fight climate change after 2012, when the Kyoto Protocol expired. Canada and the U.S. agreed to take part in these negotiations.• What have international agreements on climate change looked like since then?
Canada and Climate Change
• https://www.canada.ca/en/services/environment/weather/climatechange/climate-‐action.html• https://www.alberta.ca/climate-‐change-‐alberta.aspx• Alberta’s Carbon Tax
• https://www.alberta.ca/climate-‐carbon-‐pricing.aspx• http://edmontonjournal.com/news/local-‐news/heres-‐how-‐albertas-‐carbon-‐tax-‐works-‐and-‐how-‐it-‐will-‐affect-‐your-‐wallet
• Different Perspectives• http://edmontonjournal.com/news/politics/environment-‐minister-‐promises-‐albertans-‐will-‐soon-‐see-‐benefits-‐of-‐carbon-‐tax
• https://globalnews.ca/news/3155428/alberta-‐carbon-‐tax-‐kicks-‐in-‐its-‐already-‐here-‐we-‐cant-‐do-‐anything-‐about-‐it/
Homework
• Write a paragraph outlining • Your views on Alberta’s carbon tax (ask your parents what they think, too!)
• Video:• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHlRjEICKeY&feature=youtu.be